Mr MORRISON (Cook) (10:37): I move: That so much of the standing and sessional orders be suspended as would prevent the Member for Cook moving forthwith that the report from the Selection Committee meeting of June 18, 2013 at 5 pm be immediately tabled and reported to the House. Earlier today I asked the Speaker when the Speaker intended to table the report of the Selection Committee before the House. She indicated that would be done after question time today in accordance with that process. At issue here is the fact that prior to that meeting yesterday the coalition sought to have the bill regarding the migration amendments to implement the 457 scheme referred to the Education and Employment Committee, which has just reported before this House. If the Selection Committee indeed has decided to refer that bill to the committee, then that bill cannot be debated in this place until that committee has considered that bill. What the government are trying to do is avoid parliamentary scrutiny of what is one of the most shameless attacks on skilled migrants that has come before this place, and it has been done at the behest of the union movement. This motion and the reason why standing and sessional orders need to be suspended is to ensure that the government cannot ram their union driven attacks on skilled migration through this parliament over the last two sitting weeks of the 43rd Parliament. That is the intention of the government. Last night they tried this on and they were beaten in this House of Representatives. The government were defeated in the House when they tried to bring this on. One of the reasons they were defeated is that the minister for immigration, whose own bill this was the subject of, could not be bothered even turning up for the vote that would see his bill put before it. This is a shameless attack on process in this House and it should not be allowed to continue, and standing and sessional orders should be suspended to allow that report to be tabled. The SPEAKER: The member for Cook will resume his seat. I will just give some advice, though. The selection report has not been tabled. It is still privileged. Discussing the contents— Mr Pyne interjecting— The SPEAKER: I am clearly putting on record that it has not been tabled. The parliamentary secretary has the call.